Edwards-Barnard Co. v. Pflanz

73 S.W. 1018, 115 Ky. 393, 1903 Ky. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 29, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 73 S.W. 1018 (Edwards-Barnard Co. v. Pflanz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards-Barnard Co. v. Pflanz, 73 S.W. 1018, 115 Ky. 393, 1903 Ky. LEXIS 104 (Ky. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Opinion op the court by

JUDGE SETTLE;

Appirming.

Appellant brought suit and obtained an attachment in the Jefferson circuit court, chancery división, against Jas. H. and Caleb E. Roberts, on a note of |250 it held against them. The attachment was placed in the hands of appellee, John R. Pflanz, then sheriff of Jefferson county, for service. On the attachment was this indorsement: “W. B. Tate & Co., Golden Rule Warehouse, Garnishee: The object of this action is to attach all money, property, choses in action, or other evidence of debt in your hands belonging to Jas. H. Roberts and Caleb E. Roberts, or in which they] have any interest, and to restrain you from paying the .same to them, or to any one for them, until the further order of this court. Phelps & Thum, Pl’ff’s Attys.” The [397]*397attachment was served by the sheriff on the defendants and the garnishee named therein. It does not appear from the record that the attachment was levied by the sheriff bn any property of the defendants Roberts. It was simply executed by delivering copies thereof to each of them and to the garnishee. After the execution of the attachment, the defendants, Jas. H. and Caleb E. Roberts, with Ray & Co. (Robert P. Hare and Samuel Ray) as sureties, executed a bond to obtain a stay of the attachment, which bond was-taken by the sheriff in words and figures as follows:. “Jefferson Circuit Court. Edwards-Barnard Co., Plff. v. J. H. Roberts, etc., Defts. Forthcoming Bond. We bind ourselves to the Edwards-Barnard Co. in .the sum of $550.00, that the defendants, Jas. H. Roberts and Caleb E. Roberts, shall perform the judgment of the court in this action, or that the property attached in this action, or its value, shall be forthcoming and subject to the order of the court. January 29th, 1897. Jas. H. Roberts. Caleb E. Roberts. Ray & Co., that is, Robert P. Hare and Samuel Ray, by John T. Bashaw, Atty. in Fact.” Personal judgment was rendered in appellant’s favor against' Jas. H. and Caleb E.. Roberts in the attachment suit for the amount of the note sued on, and execution was issued thereon, directed to the sheriff of Henry county, where the defendants then resided, but was returned, “No property found.” Thereafter appellant brought suit in the Jefferson circuit court, common pleas division, against Robert P. Hare on the bond taken by the sheriff; Samuel Ray having in the meantime died intestate and insolvent. In that action judgment by default was rendered against Hare in appellant’s favor for $250, with interest and costs, upon which execution was. issued, directed to the sheriff of Jefferson county, by whom it was returned with the indorsement, “No property found,”' [398]*398etc. Then the appellant instituted this action in the Jefferson circuit court, chancery division, against appellee, seeking to recover of him the amount of its debt and costs against Jas. H. and Caleb E. Roberts, upon the alleged ground that he had negligently, as sheriff, failed to require good security upon the bond taken by him in the matter of the attachment, and that the sureties therein, Samuel Ray and Robert P. Hare, were insolvent when they were accepted on the bond, and that their insolvency was known, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have been known, to appellee at the time. After answer and other necessary pleadings had been filed, proof in the shape of depositions was taken by the parties upon the issues thus formed, and upon submission and trial of the case judgment was rendered by the lower court dismissing appellant’s petition, and allowing appellee his costs. Of that judgment appellant complains. Hence this appeal.

We will not take time to consider all of the questions-raised by the appeal, deeming it necessary to notice only such as in our opinion are decisive of the case. It will be observed that this action is purely an ordinary or common-law action, and it is a well-known rule in such cases that the judgment of the chancellor will be as favorably regarded as would be the verdict of a properly instructed jury. Hence, unless palpably against the evidence, it will not be disturbed. Louisville, etc., Railway Co. v. Taylor, 96 Ky., 241, 16 R., 579, 28 S. W., 666. The rule is, however, different in equitable actions; for in .such action this court will, upon appeal, determine the weight of the evidence. Scott v. Mitchell (19 R., 218), 39 S. W., 507. The judgment of the chancellor in this case must therefore be tested by the rule first herein stated, and, unless it is found to be flagrantly against the evidence, it will not be disturbed. [399]*399The only issue of fact necessary to be determined by the chancellor was whether or not appellee, as sheriff, was guilty of negligence in taking the bond executed by the Robertses, with Ray and Hare as sureties. The sheriff is not the guarantor of the solvency of a surety whom he may take upon a bond. We have no statute in this State fixing the liability of the sheriff, or defining the degree of care required of him in the matter of taking bonds. The rule by which his official conduct in such cases is to be measured is thus stated in Mechem on Public Officers, section 762: “So, where it is the duty of the officer to take, for the protection of the plaintiff, bonds or other securities, it is the officer’s duty, not only to obtain the bond, bail, or other security, but to use reasonable care and diligence to see that none but competent and reasonable securities are accepted, and that the securities themselves are in proper and sufficient form. He is not the insurer of the solvency of the sureties, unless the statute makes him so; nor is he liable, though deceived, where he exercises reasonable care. But if he discharges the goods or debtor without any bond at all, or one in which the sureties’ names are forged, or if he accepts insufficient sureties, without making a reasonable effort to ascertain their solvency, he is liable* A fortiori, is • he liable, where he accepts sureties who he knows are irresponsible.”- It must be presumed that the chancellor found from the evidence that appellee, in taking; the bond in controversy, used reasonable care to ascertain the financial condition of the sureties, and to satisfy himself’ of their solvency. If he did, he can not be held responsible' for a mere mistake of judgment.

Of the witnesses whose depositions were taken by appellant, only one had had any business connection with the sureties, and none of them claimed to have any actual [400]*400knowledge of their business or affairs. What they testified to was largely hearsay, and what they professed to know was based mainly upon suspicion and conjecture. Frese, of the Western Bank, whose deposition was taken by appellant, testified that the credit of the sureties was at the, date of the bond fairly good with the bank. Hare, one of the sureties, and young Ray, who was in the employ of the firm, both say that at the time the bond was executed their assets exceeded their liabilities by a considerable amount; and, though they soon thereafter failed, it seemed in large measure to have been brought about by a destructive fire in their tobacco warehouse. Hare also testified that the firm of Ray & Hare, at the date of the execution of the bond, owned a house and lot in' the village of Lewis-port, Hancock county, which was unincumbered, and which was taken by them at the valuation of $800, but was subsequently assessed at $200. This lot was, after the execution of the bond, transferred to the bank by Ray & Hare, at a valuation of $360, and was afterwards sold by the bank at $75.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W. 1018, 115 Ky. 393, 1903 Ky. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-barnard-co-v-pflanz-kyctapp-1903.